Taiwan Activists Push for Ban on 'Holy Pig' Contest

Animal rights activists on Friday protested a traditional "holy pig" ritual in which the swine are force-fed before being sacrificed in public.

Farmers compete to raise the heaviest pig in the annual ceremony, later killing the animals to please the gods. Critics say the swine are often kept in small enclosures and are hit on the snout to force them to keep eating.

Demonstrators shouted "Stop the holy pig weight race!" and "Overweight not healthy!" near the Taoist temple where the contest took place as thousands of followers and tourists flocked to watch proceedings.

The heaviest pig weighed 981.6 kilograms (2,160 pounds), with its owner awarded nearly six ounces of gold by the temple authorities.

Facing criticism from animal rights activists, temple officials have previously said they will end the generations-old competition in 2017.

"The temple's chief executive revealed the plan for the first time last year, but since then the board of the temple hasn't discussed the proposal. I fear it's only lip service," activist Chen Yu-min said.

She added that while she respected the participants' traditions, temple authorities should not encourage the weight competition which she described as "abusive and brutal".